Loop Capital analyst Dominick Gabriele issued the Buy rating on Mastercard Monday, setting a $631 price target. The call comes as the stock sits about 18% below its 52-week high of $601.77, a level the firm sees as an attractive entry point.
Mastercard Incorporated, MA
Gabriele pointed to multiple growth drivers including new geography penetration, value-added services, agentic transactions, and cross-border volumes. He also flagged international cash-to-card conversion as a long-term tailwind.
The firm’s 2026 and 2027 adjusted earnings per share forecasts are both above Wall Street consensus. Analysts broadly expect Mastercard to earn $19.48 per share in fiscal 2026.
Loop Capital argued that investor fears around stablecoin penetration, slowing payment industry revenue growth, AI disruption, and regulatory risk are overblown. Gabriele said the stock looks oversold as a result.
On stablecoins specifically, the firm flipped the narrative. Loop Capital views agentic commerce and crypto payments as positives for card networks, and said Mastercard is actively building capabilities to sit at the center of stablecoin payment flows.
Loop Capital isn’t alone in its bullish stance. BNP Paribas Exane upgraded MA to Outperform with a $600 target on March 19. TD Cowen reiterated its Buy rating with a $671 target, and Compass Point raised its target from $620 to $735 in January.
The overall Wall Street picture is clear: 6 Strong Buy ratings, 19 Buy ratings, 1 Hold, and just 1 Sell. The average price target across 27 analysts sits at $667.88 — about 35% above current levels.
Mastercard also recently acquired BVNK, a stablecoin payments orchestration platform. Evercore ISI noted the deal but kept an In Line rating.
Meanwhile, Mastercard is reportedly working to sell its real-time payments unit, acquired from Denmark’s Nets Group in 2019 for $3.2 billion. That would unwind the company’s largest-ever acquisition.
Mastercard’s Q4 results were strong. The company reported EPS of $4.76, beating the $4.24 consensus by $0.52. Revenue of $8.81 billion came in just ahead of estimates, rising 17.5% year-over-year.
The company has delivered 16% revenue growth over the trailing twelve months. Return on equity stands at 203.92%, and net margin is 45.65%.
On valuation, MA trades at a price-to-earnings ratio of 29.83 with a PEG ratio of 1.56. The 50-day moving average sits at $519.05, while the 200-day is at $546.90 — both well above current price.
Loop Capital noted that Mastercard’s business model is agnostic to where consumers spend within retail or services, giving it insulation even if travel spending softens in the U.S. and Middle East near term.
Institutional investors hold 97.28% of the float. Mn Services Vermogensbeheer B.V. raised its stake by 2% in Q4, bringing its holding to 315,374 shares worth roughly $180 million.
Mastercard also declared a quarterly dividend of $0.87 per share, payable May 8 to holders of record on April 9. That works out to a $3.48 annualized yield of 0.7%.
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